As a U.S. expatriate residing in abroad, you still must file a US Income Tax
Return each year on your worldwide income! The stories you hear from the fellow
American expatriate sitting next to you at the bar that once you leave the
U.S., you no longer owe any taxes or have to file tax returns , are about as
true as most bar room tales. Its against the law to give up your U.S.
citizenship in order to avoid U.S. taxes! Therefore, if you aren't filing your
U.S. tax return, the statute of limitations on tax collections will not run out
and your tax return obligation (and perhaps the taxes you owe) only grows
greater as each year passes.

US Tax Treaties with over 42 Countries

The US has income tax treaties with over 42 other countries. Now, both the IRS
and the foreign taxing authorities can exchange information on their citizens
living in the other country. Both the Internal Revenue Service and taxing
authorities in foreign countries use these treaties regularly to exchange
information on their residents living in the other's country. The IRS usually
has several agents attached to the U.S. Embassy in each country to assist U.S.
Citizens and to search out and report to the IRS citizens who may not be filing
their U.S. tax returns.

A Tax Treaty is quite complex, but includes many special provisions which can
benefit an American living and working outside of the US. It attempts to reduce
or eliminate any double taxation of your income by both countries by allowing
credits for foreign income taxes you pay while living in outside the U.S.
against your U.S. income taxes. This credit more often than not will totally
offset any U.S. tax you might owe on your worldwide income in the U.S. The
credit is not automatic, you must file a US return to claim it.

Statute of Limitations

If you fail to file that return for any tax year (whether a return is required
or not), the statute of limitations on tax assessments for that year will never
run out. Therefore, if you live abroad for 10 years, and then return to the
United States, the IRS may question your failure to file returns for those ten
years and later can make assessments based on their best estimate of your
income. The interest and penalties on any old tax amounts owed grows faster
than you can imagine and after 4-5 years may exceed the amount of the original
taxes owed.

If youdo file your tax return
each tax year while living abroad, the statute of limitations in most
situations for IRS audits will expire three years after you file those returns.
That means the IRS cannot go back (absent fraud) and try to audit or change
those returns later. Therefore, you should file your return even if you have
no income or don't owe taxes in order to force the statute of limitations to run
and eliminate future problems when you decide to return to the U.S.

Foreign Earned Income Exclusion

If you have your full time residence abroad for a full calendar year (bonafide
residence test) or do not return to the US more than 35 days in a consecutive 12
month period (physical present test), you can exclude up to $91,500 of earned
income from U.S. Income Taxation for 2010 and lesser amounts in earlier years.
If you are married, and both of you earn income and reside and work abroad, you
can also exclude up to another $95100 (for tax year 2012) and less amounts
for earlier years of your spouses income from taxation. These exclusions can only be
claimed on a filed tax return and is not automatic. Late filed returns more
than 18 months late may not be eligible for the exclusion if any taxes are owed
on those late filed returns. This is a fantastic advantage for people who live
and work outside of the U.S. Earned income is that paid you for your work or
services and does not apply to rental income, dividend or interest income, or
other types of income that is not paid for your own personal efforts.

You can also
claiman
additional exclusion from your U.S. taxes in excess of the $95,100 (2012) or
$97,600 (for 2013), if the rent, utilities, etc. you pay on your residence
abroad and other living expenses exceed a standard amount (which is currently
approx $14,400 per year) established by the IRS. This exclusion only comes into
play when your earnings are in excess of the foreign earned income
exclusion. Note There is a maximum allowable housing deduction (before
deducting the $14,400) and the IRS allows even higher amounts in over 100 cities
in the world which have higher housing costs. See the instructions to Form 2555
to see that list of cities with the higher allowable cost of housing.

U.S. Self Employment Tax

If you are a bonafide employee of your foreign employer (which can mean your
own foreign corporation) and have foreign social security and other payroll
taxes withheld from your wages, and you are considered an employee under local
foreign law, you do not have to worry about paying any social security taxes to
the U.S. The IRS then considers you a foreign employee. However, if you are self
employed by contract, and no foreign social security or other payroll taxes are
being withheld from your earnings ( in other words an independent contractor)
you must file a Schedule C with your U.S. tax return and pay U.S. self
employment tax (social security taxes by the self employed) on your net earnings
( after deducting your expenses). The self employment tax rate is 15.3% and
is not reduced by the previously mentioned foreign earned income exclusion or
foreign tax credits.

An exception to
paying social security on your foreign self employment income occurs if you
reside in a country which has a social security agreementwith
the US. In that event you can elect to have your earnings covered by the
foreign country's social security (only if they have a social security agreement
with the US), and not have to pay US self employment tax (social security). A
list of the countries that have such an agreement with the US ishere.(click
to go to list)

Forms Which Must be Filed With IRS to Avoid Severe Penalties

If you own more than a 10% ownership interest in a foreign corporation you are
required to file a special form with the IRS reporting that interest. In many
cases, if that foreign corporation is making profits, it will be a "controlled
foreign corporation" and you may also owe U.S. tax on its earnings. If you are
the beneficiary or trustee of a foreign trust (such as a Fideicomiso which holds
title to your residence in Mexico) you must file a special form with the IRS.
Another a special form must be filed with the U.S. Treasury if you have
ownership or signature authority over a Mexican bank account which anytime
during the year has a balance of more than $10,000 US or more. If you fail to
file any of these forms as required by law, you will be subject to penalties up
to $10,000 or more. These penalties might be assessed many years from now when
the U.S. IRS and the Mexican Hacienda finally start sharing information on a
regular basis. If you do not file these forms when required, it will be very
difficult to later avoid those penalties.

Taxes on World Wide Income

U.S. Permanent Residents (green card holders) as well as U.S. Citizens must
report each year their income earned anywhere in the world. That means your U.S.
income tax return must include:

Foreign
dividends

Rental
Income Earned Abroad

Foreign
pension income

Foreign
capital gains or losses on stocks, bonds, real estate

Foreign
royalties

All other
foreign income

Due Date of Tax Return

If you have your personal permanent residence is abroad on April 15thof
any year, you get an automatic extension to file your tax return for the
previous calendar year until June 15th.
If you need more time, you can file several further extension requests which can
extend the due date of your tax return until October 15thusing
Form 4868. If you owe taxes, and fail to pay the estimated taxes in by April 15th,
you will be subject to interest and penalties for that underpayment. However,
those penalties are not as severe as those imposed for failing to file your tax
return in a timely manner. It is therefore wise to always file an extension if
you are going to file your return later than April 15th,
even though you do not have the money to pay your estimated taxes at that time
because that eliminates the larger late filing penalty which is 5% per month.

Avoiding U.S. State Taxes

Do not assume just
because you moved out of the U.S. that your previous state of residence has no
claim on taxing your income. Many states such as California, Virginia, New
Mexico and South Carolinamake
it very difficult to give up your "tax domicile" in the state and require that
you file state income tax returns (and pay the tax) even if you do not move back
until many years later. Some of the criteria that a state looks at to determine
if you are a resident for state income tax purposes includes your driver
license, if you register to vote there, if you maintain an address there, the
location of your bank accounts, if you own or rent real property there, the
license plates on your cars, and if you still receive utility bills in that
state. There are many other factors used by state taxing agencies to determine
if you are a resident, but they are too numerous to mention here. You must be
careful to reduce or eliminate all indices of residency or your previous state
of residency in the U.S. will come after you for state income taxes. You must
carefully plan your departure from your previous home state by reviewing your
states tax residency laws and taking the actual steps necessary to prove to
that state you no longer have a "tax domicile" there after you move abroad. If
you do not, the taxes,penalties
and interest later assessed by that state can be huge.

You do have to continue to pay taxes in a state if you receive rental income
there or receive income from a trade or business located there, even if you are
no longer a resident. Investment income from
stock sales, dividends, andinterest
are not subject tostatetaxunless
you still have your tax domicile in there. Generally you can only give up your
tax domicile if you establish full time permanent residency abroad or in another
state without any intent to return to your previous state. The rules defining
"tax domicile" vary significantly in the various states and should be reviewed.
Pensions are no longer taxable in the state in which you earned the pension if
you permanently leave that state and established a tax domicile abroad or in
another state.

What About Returns Which Were not Filed for Years You Lived Abroad?

Though not required to by
law, the IRS currently allows an expatriate to file past tax returns which were
erroneously not previously filed and claim the foreign earned income exclusion
and foreign tax credits as if the returns had been filed on a timely basis. That
usually means most delinquent expatriates who file past returns owe little taxes
or interest after claiming those benefits. It can easily be determined if
returns are owed for past years by ordering a transcript from the IRS. This can
be done by a tax professional without triggering any inquiry from the IRS
concerning the taxpayer. However if certain foreign reporting forms for foreign
corporations, foreign partnerships, investment companies, foreign trusts,
foreign financial and bank accounts, and foreign partnerships, LLCS, or
investment companies are not filed in a timely manner the IRS may collect
substantial penalties (often $10,000 or more) for not filing these forms unless
the taxpayer can provide the IRS with a reasonable excuse for their previous
failure to file. The IRS has not clearly defined what they will accept as a
reasonable excuse.

The IRS currently has the 2012 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program in effect
which may be useful to reduce penalties and eliminate possible criminal problems
for those who have not filed their returns or reported their offshore assets and
income for past years. Read more
about it those programs here

Offers
in Compromises and Payment Plans

If one of the reasons you are living abroad is that you owe the IRS or state
taxing agencies Offer in Compromise programs which may allow you to settle the
balance owed for pennies on the dollar. When you do owe back taxes, the amount
owed increases at a fast pace due to interest and penalties and therefore can
get very large compared with the original amount of tax owed. In order to make
an offer in compromise you must file returns for all of your past tax years

Many
delinquent taxpayers have through the use of an offer in compromise settled
with payments of anywhere from 10% to 50% of the total amount owed. The IRS
statistics show that in the past year only 15 percent of the Offers in
Compromise have been accepted and that the average compromise was 20 percent of
the total amount due.

Recently the IRS liberalized the
offer in compromise rules which make it
available to many more taxpayers and much more likely your offer will be
accepted.

The
entire process usually takes three to six months and requires filing financial
information with the IRS and the required forms. You can make an offer which
allows you to pay off the amount agreed over a period of time. The IRS has
tightened up the procedures so less than 20% of applications for offers in
compromise are accepted. If you have assets or potential for future income
large enough to pay off the tax debt it is doubtful that your offer in
compromise will be accepted.

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